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REVIEW: Filter Forge

Monday 09 Feb 2009

  • platform Mac OS X 10.4/5, Windows 2000/XP/Vista
  • price £70 plus VAT ($99 - Basic Edition) ; £142 plus VAT ($199 - Standard Edition) ; £215 plus VAT ($299 - Professional Edition)
  • company Filter Forge
  • pros Innovative; many user-created effects; intuitive nodal filter creation tool.
  • cons Doesn’t work as a Smart Filter.
  • rating 4.5 Best Buy

This review is taken from our group test of Photoshop CS4 plug-ins.

Filter Forge is – by quite a margin – the most powerful plug-in we’ve looked at here. That’s because it’s a tool for creating plug-ins, both generative texture-creation tools and effects filters.


It’s available in three versions. The Basic version allows you to use filters created in Filter Forge – including the 5,000-plus downloadable from the company’s website. A beta version for Mac has just been released.

The Standard version gives you a node-based editor for creating and modifying filters. The Professional version is the version that most Digital Arts readers will want: it adds support for images larger than 3,000 pixels wide or tall, and multi-core workstations.


The Photoshop plug-in side of Filter Forge gives you a dialog based around five texture categories and three effect groups. When you select your filter, you have a choice of presets, settings, and lighting options. The Settings tab has
a Randomizer button that helps you learn what each parameter does. There are about 50 filters provided, while the ‘Download More Filters’ button takes you to the Filter Forge website, where there are loads more created by the online community. Some of these are truly excellent.

Building your own plug-ins takes place in the Filter Editor. This gives you a grid on which to build a nodal system from more than 80 components, like building a composition in a VFX tool. These include user inputs, generators, and processing tools.

It’s a powerful and logical way of creating effects that’s relatively easy to learn by seeing how other effects are built. Creating filters from scratch is time-consuming, but for a wider user group, it’s a great way to modify already-created effects.

Supported hosts: Photoshop 6/7/CS-CS4 (Mac version supports CS2-CS4 only), Painter 8/IX


Neil Bennett

Keep up-to-date with the latest creative hardware and software reviews -- click here follow @digital_arts on Twitter.

Question of the day!

Neil Bennett
Editor

Do you share your creations online?

Question of the day!

Do you share your creations online?

% of Digital Arts readers agree with you

Yes
TBC
No
TBC

What do you create and how do you share it?

124 characters remaining

Follow the conversation at @TabletChat

paintings & illustrations, mostly, which i upload to flickr.RT @fragmentedm

I draw manga/anime characters. I also do graphic design and photography.RT @spialelo

Yes. I usually put them up on my #deviantart account for feedback on how to improve.RT @spialelo


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